¡ASK A MEXICAN! A special Mexican-American books gift guide

Dear Readers: Behold your favorite Mexican’s annual Christmas gift guide, where I give shout-outs to some of my favorite books that deserve your money this holiday season! And for once, I won’t recommend my books—¡Ask a Mexican!, Orange County: A Personal History, and Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America—as gifts…oh wait, I just did! In all honesty, while I always appreciate ustedes buying my libros and handing them out as regalos, the following items are just as ching*n*s, if not more so.

Juan in a Hundred: The Representation of Latinos on Network News: This book won’t be published until early January, but preorder this masterful analysis of the paucity of Mexis on la tele, and the laughable representations that do make it through. Author Otto Santa Ana is a UCLA prof who boils down reams of data into a clear, well-written analysis that will have you rooting for the demise of the networks.

Anything by Cinco Puntos Press: You might’ve read a recent New York Times story decrying the lack of Latinos in children’s books. And while you don’t necessarily need Mexis in a book to get Mexi kids reading (although I must admit, I always thought Tales of a Fourth-Grade Nothing was set on a Zapatista community in Chiapas), the Times’ article was wrong: there are a chingo of children’s and young-adult books featuring Mexis, and some of the best come from Cinco Puntos Press in El Paso. Run by my amigo Bobby Bird, one of the most Mexican gabachos you’ll ever meet, Cinco Punto’s books are wonderfully illustrated, hilarious—and they also sell great non-fiction for adults. Check them out at http://www.cincopuntos.com.

Anything by Lalo Alcaraz and Sam Quinones: I plug these guys every year for a reason—not only are they amigos and mentors, but they’re the titans of their respective fields. Alcaraz, of course, draws awesome cartoons, but this year also saw the advent of his pocho.com, what The Onion would be if it were Chicano and funny (recent story: “Realization: Man watches telenovelas for boobs, not to learn Spanish”). And Los Angeles Times reporter Quinones just happens to be one of the best narrative reporters in the country, with his books True Tales from Another Mexico and Antonio’s Gun and Delfino’s Dream: True Tales of Mexican Migration, the best books on Mexico since Insurgent Mexico—and you should buy that one, también!

Barrios to Burbs: The Making of the Mexican-American Middle Class: Shout-out to las mujeres! USC professor Jody Agius Vallejo penned a brilliant look into the Mexicans Americans don’t want to acknowledge: those who aren’t poor or cholos. She makes her fluid arguments with stats, great citations, and amazing anecdotes—the opening scene in her book sounds like a Horace Greeley fable come to life mixed in with a Lupe Ontiveros fantasy and is written sans academia’s stultifying pedantry.

An Atlas of Historic New Mexico Maps, 1550-1941: This gorgeous coffee table book published by the University of New Mexico Press presents pictures of all sorts of maps, along with brief histories of them and detailed close-ups. Perfect for the nerd in your family—and you know every Mexican family has at least two.

And remember folks: when you wrap up these books, make sure to stuff them in XBox 360 boxes to trick the recipient—it’s the Mexican way!

Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net, be his fan on Facebook, follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano or ask him a video question at youtube.com/askamexicano!

What Books on Mexicans Should I Buy This Christmas?

[¡Ask a Mexican!] A list of the Mexican’s favorite books this year

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I find Mr. Arellano's article stupid and insulting. First of all, the word "Mexis' is not a word and is an offensive term he made up. "Chingo" translates to the everyday word for having sex and "cochino" means dirty. He further insults our culture by suggesting that "it is the Mexican way to trick the recipient of Christmas gift.